There are places that don't make it onto the highlight reels.
Kohunlich is one of them.
Deep in the jungle of southern Quintana Roo, far from the crowds of Chichén Itzá and Tulum, an ancient Maya city waits in near-total silence. Massive pyramids. A forest of cohune palms older than memory. And the Maya Sun Temple — five monumental stucco faces of the Sun God, still intact after more than a thousand years, staring back at you from the stone. The only temple of its kind open to the public, with this level of preservation, anywhere in the Maya world.
This is not a drop-off tour. We pick you up at your accommodation and head south — through small villages, open fields of sugarcane, and the quiet countryside of southern Quintana Roo. An hour of real Mexico before the jungle takes over. We travel with you, wait for you, and bring you back. Your private vehicle, your pace, your day.
At the site, your English-speaking guide brings Kohunlich to life — not with rehearsed facts, but with the kind of stories that only come from people who grew up on this land. You'll climb the pyramids. You'll stand above the jungle canopy. You'll understand why the Maya chose this place.
For those who want to go further, Dzibanché awaits — and this is no ordinary add-on. This was the first capital of the Kaan Dynasty, the most powerful ruling force in the entire Classic Maya world. From here, the Snake Kings commanded Calakmul and dominated the majority of Mayan civilisation for centuries. Walk through two monumental groups, including the Kinichná Acropolis — a massive structure rising 40 metres above the jungle. And if you look carefully at the Temple of the Owl, you are standing in front of one of only two known royal mausoleums in the entire Maya world, the other being the Temple of the Inscriptions in Palenque, Chiapas. Most travellers will never know this place exists. You now do.
Private vehicle. English-speaking guide. All entry tickets included. No hidden costs. No rushing.
Just the jungle, the stones, and a civilisation that still has things to say.